DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle 6 ity Center will be given Sunday, arch 16, at 2:30 p. m., by the Jewish Business and Professional Women's Club. Mrs. Lillian Gru- The annual bridge and mah ber is president of the club, and jong party for the benefit of the Miss Rose Charmer is chairman Toyery at the Jewish Commun- for the party. Meet Your Friends at the DEXTER FULLERTON MARKET Offering You a Complete Line of QUALITY GROCERIES, FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES AT REASONABLE PRICES PROMPT DELIVERIES AT ANY TIME DEXTER FULLERTON MARKET To. 6-9232-8-5424 12540 Dexter, cor. Fullerton MORRIS SHAPIRO and JOE MENDLOVITS, Props. :11,111 1 11:11. IMOS. 1513-21 WOODWARD AVENUE . . . and Branch. tIP The tonic that will set your home "right" .. . and in style this Spring! Exquisitely designed, compact NELSON console of exceptional tonal beauty ; in rich mahogany finish. Surprisingly small down payments delivers! Immediately after voting in favor of the so-called Lend-Lease bill which passed the Senate Sat- urday, Senator Prentiss M. Brown stated that upwards of 20,000 communications from Michigan people interested in the measure had gone unanswered due to the physical impossibility of handling the volume of mail. "I take this means of acknowl- edging those letters which I have been unable to answer. I desire to thank my correspondents for their interest and assure them that their views were considered," Senator Brown declared. "I voted for the bill because I believe that aid to England and British success will be a material factor in preventing our active participation in the war. While as is well known to the people of Michigan I have by no means been a blind follower of the President, I am in favor gen- erally of his policies and think that his foreign policy is for the best interests of the United States. Furthermore I believe that the overwhelming sentiment of the people of Michigan was for the Lend-Lease bill and for the Presi- dent's policy," Brown stated. The Senator went on the say that he voted for the bill be- cause he thinks it will help to defeat Hitler, dding, "If Hitler wins, the American people will fasten upon themselves a mili- tarism that would be tragic. I am not one of those who fears in- vasion, but I know the American people well enough to know that in the event of a Hitler victory they would insist upon a defense far beyond any dreamed of today. It is plain to me that a vote for this bill is best for our country." In a statement explaining why he voted against the bill, Senator Anrthur H. Vandenberg says: "I favor baximum material aid to England so long as we do not become a co-belligerent; and so long as we do not dissipate the essential nuclus of our own na- tional defense. But both of these limitations are threatened by H. R. 1776. I want Britain to win. I hate Hitletism and every other form of dictatorship. I repeat that I want to aid Britain in eveey material way which does not make us a belligerent and which does not rob us of the essential conti- nental defenses upon which we must ultimately rely to defend democracy in the Western Hemis- phere if Britain should lose (which God forbid)." iNCHRONICLE WANT ADS PAY p Purim will be celebrated by Detroit Young Judaeans with a carnival at the Bnai David Syna- gogue, Elmhurst near 14th, on IMPORTANT NEWS FROM RELATIVE IN GERMANY FOR MRS. BETTY SALKY HARRY BRADLIN Of the Piano Department of Grinnell Brothers Extends an Invitation to His Many Friends to Visit Him at 1515 WOODWARD AVENUE Where He Can Display to Them the Latest Piano Creations Confessions of Young Judaean Thyssen Exposed Purim Carnival on 23 Sunday, March NEW YORK — World War II Sen. Brown Says Bill Will Help Defeat Hitler Party for Center Toyery This Sunday If any one knows of the ad- dress of Mrs. Betty Salky, kindly inform the office of the Detroit Section of the National Council of Jewish Women, Madison 6970. There is important news for her from a relative in Berlin, Ger- many. ..........,..... ..................„„.„„.,„„.................... ....... 0 - - '1 , 0. (4.' 4.4 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 Celanese Taffeta CURTAINS. Can be used as a tailored curtain or on a traverse rod. Just as lovely for living room and dining room as well as bedroom. these grand new curtains will go a long way $ toward sprucing up your home for PASSOVER. 44 inches wide x 2 'A yards long and 9-inch hem. They wont crash. peal or mildew. In Eggshell. Rose Beige and Moonstone. 5 & E E r, PA'" 50 pair 44 inches x 2 / 1 2 yards long—$7.50 pair & & TI 1 iii 5 E & Sold exclusively $ in Detroit by Ben Pupko Open Evenings Phone HOgarth 4857 n /A 5 5 5 A g I i t t ot nu t. ll E . i E 01111$1. Let our interior deco- rator advise you on your home decorating problems. MISS HELEN KASS 5 5 2 5 EI b NI ma ha a ■■■%. ■■■■■ ■■■■■■■■■■■ a o LI mieva o ■■■■■ o i a mow 1... , ■■•■c has been full of surprises and mysteries—not the least of which is the "Confession" of the Ger- man industrialist Fritz Thyssen which made its sensational debut over here in April, 1940, and was circulated in Europe and throughout the world by the Brit- ish Ministry of Information. "Thyssen Confession Exposed," which appears in the March 14 issue of Friday Magazine, dis- closes that Fritz Thyssen is play- ing the same game in 1940 that his father, August Thyssen, play- ed in 1918; and reveals the re- markable "coincidence" that ex- ists between the confessions of Fritz Thyssen in 1940 and the August Thyssen "confessions" of After the August Thyssen "Con- fession" le 9 s1 son" appeared in 1918 nego- tiations were secretly entered into between Britain, France and Im- perial Germany. The result was the Versailles Peace. Secret negotiations involving British and American appeasers have also followed the 1940 Thy- ssen "Confession." These nego- tiations are planned to bring about a new Versailles—an Ap- peasement Peace. The Thyssen "Confession" of 1940 is an appeal to German, French and British businessmen and others to make peace by dis- placing Adolf Hitler and institu- ting "Christian Fascism." The Thyssen "Confession" of 1918 was an appeal to German, French and British businessmen and others to make peace by dis- placing the Kaiser. Playing the same "role" his fa- ther played in 1918, Fritz Thy- ssen "is today the key Nazi go-between for Hitler and Ap- peasers in Britain and America. Fritz Thyssen is the key man in Appeasement International." Sunday, March 23, from 4 to 10. The chairmen of the various committees are heartened by the excellent response that they are receiving from the community. Many of the leading merchants are donating valuable prizes. The Shaarey Zedek Library is lending interesting material for the Palestine exhibit. Miss Helen Kass is executive director of Young Judaea in De- troit. Ruth Friedland is chair- man of bazaar and is assisted by a senior committee composed of club leaders and by a junior committee consisting of repre- sentatives from each Young Ju- daea group. Rabbi Frain to Review Jan Bnai Israel School of Pontiac to Celebrate Purim on Sunday On Sunday, March 16, at 2 p. m., the Talmud Torah of Con- gregation Bnai Israel, 268 W. Pike St., Pontiac, Mich., will hold its annual Purim party. Included in the program will be a Purim play, Purim games, recitations, songs and distributions of Purim gifts. The Bnai Israel Sisterhood will provide the refreshments for the party. On Sunday, March 16, at 6 p. m., Congregation Bnai Israel will sponsor a Purim supper for members and friends. An enter- taining program has been planned. The speaker will be Rabbi I. Strauss whose topic will be "What Wilt Thou, Queen Es- ther?" Cantor L. Resnick of De- troit will render Yiddish and He- brew songs. The supper will be held at Congregation Bnai Is- rael, 268 W. Pike St., Pontiac. The public is invited. Valtin's "Out of the Night" on Friday "Out of the Night" by Jan Valtin, the current best seller which exposes the international plottings of both Communists and Nazis, will be the subject of Rabbi Leon Fram's sermon at Temple Beth El, Woodward at Gladstone, next Friday night, March 21, at 8 o'clock. Temple Beth El has recently had notably fine attendances at its Sabbath eve services. The average attendance has been over a thousand. This is believed due not only to the subjects of the sermons but also to the excellent work of the Temple Choir direct- ed by George Galvani, and ac- companied by Jason Tickton. The innovation of the reading from the Scroll of the Torah on Fri- day night, with the magnificent ceremonial music that accom- panies it, has also attracted a great deal of attention. Young people has been coming to the services in order that they may later participate in the youth symposium which follows every service. Purim Masquerade Ball of Bnai Brith Auxiliary Hebrew Ladies Aid Society on Sunday to Give Affairs for the Mo'os Chitim The Women's Auxiliary of Bnai Brith will hold its annual paid- up membership affair in the form of a Purim masquerade ball, Sunday evening, March 16, at 5 the Temple Beth El. Dancing /A contests will be held, with prizes, 5 for the most original costumes. 5 Admission is by membership 5 card only, to members and their Those members who E escorts. have not yet their dues may E do so at the paid door, in order to IA be eligible to attend. 5 On Monday evening, March 17, & the Women's Auxiliary is invited E to come to an open meeting of the Pisgah Lodge, at the Jewish i Center, with Dr. A. L. Sachar as guest speaker. & with these new E O 'Brighten Up Your Home : March 14, 1941 At the last meeting of the Hebrew Ladies' Aid Society, it was decided to have a luncheon on April 2, proceeds to go far Mo'os Chitim. It will be held at the Dexter-Lawrence Hall with Mrs. Ethel Goodman in charge of arrangements. It was also decided to donate $75 towards the Gewerkshaften campaign. Acknowledgment is made to Mrs. Eugene Gelbman for her generous donat'on to the society. At the monthly meeting of the board of directors held at the home of Mrs. Eugene Diamond, president, Mrs. Paul R. Freeman expressed appreciation to the Dr. Edith Sterba to Address officers and members for their co-opera ion in making the Council Jrs. on Sunday dinner-dance held March 2 a The National Council of Jew- success. ish Juniors will meet at Hotel Statler, at 2:30 p. in. on Sunday, Downtown Synagogue At- March 16. tracts Many Visitors Dr. Edith Sterba, foremost Vi- ennese psychoanalyst, who main- The Downtown Synagogue on tains a nursery school in Detroit Griswold and State is attracting and is internationally known for many visitors. Guests in the city her work with children, will be have been coming to the Down- the guest speaker. Dr. Sterba town Synagogue for services and will discuss "Child Psychology to observe Yahrzeit. Last week, and Its Problems". Ben Abrams of New York, who All members are urged to bring is associated with the Waist their filled "milk bottles" for the Trade Journal, was among the Nursery Milk Fund. guests.